80% of people in Singapore want hotels to offer tech that minimizes contact with staff and other guests
86% interested in hotels using AI to deliver more relevant offers
Hoteliers look to tech to ease staffing woes and support unbundled, pay-for-use services
SINGAPORE—28 July, 2022A new study by Oracle Hospitality and Skift - “Hospitality in 2025: Automated, Intelligent… and More Personal” - shows that 92% of people in Singapore plan to travel in the next six months – with 36% taking an epic ‘revenge travel’ trip – however, many want to eliminate the ‘touch’ from the high touch industry they once knew. Nearly three-quarters (80%) of travelers want to use their mobile device to manage their hotel experience, including checking in and out, paying, ordering food, and more. This is good news for hoteliers looking to tech to manage through the staffing shortage without hurting guest engagement and service.
Over the next few years, travelers are also looking to personalize their journey even more by picking their exact room and floor and paying for only the amenities they want – and even wanting to pre-screen properties in the metaverse (76%). Moreover, 86% are interested in hotels using AI to better tailor services and offers, such as room pricing or food suggestions and discounts. More than half (52%) of hotel executives in Singapore see this ‘unbundled’ model as the future of hotel revenue management.
“We have seen how technology has reshaped and enriched guest experiences in new ways,” said Patrick Andres, Regional Vice President Hotels and Food & Beverage, JAPAC, Oracle. “Guests have now come to expect highly digital, self-service experiences across all aspects of their lives, including travel, and the hospitality industry must move at the same pace by adopting and integrating new systems in order to better serve the modern traveler.”
“There’s no doubt that the future of travel will look quite different than what we initially envisioned it to be,” said James Merchant, Senior Vice President IT & Distribution Systems, Accor (South East Asia, Japan and South Korea). “Accor hotels will continue to progressively adopt new digital technologies and improve operational efficiency – from expediting check-in processes to embracing a contactless model – to provide seamless and meaningful experiences for our guests.”
Two years of restrictions created a pent-up desire to travel, with 36% of people in Singapore planning a larger, pricier “revenge travel” trip. But the pandemic has also left jetsetters feeling antisocial with many desiring contactless and self-service technology:
The labor shortage remains a top issue in the hotel industry, but hoteliers are working hard to onboard new tech to ease the strain on guests and staff:
Travelers are mixed on how patient they are willing to be in this transition:
Whether ordering room service or signing onto Netflix, Singapore travelers want the ease and convenience of home while traveling:
Consumers are interested in a hotel model that lets them pay for just what they use. Hoteliers, in tandem, are looking at new service models that upsell everything from amenities to adventures:
For travelers:
The “Hospitality in 2025: Automated, Intelligent… and More Personal” study surveyed 5,266 consumers and 633 hotel executives across the world – including 480 travelers and 51 hotel executives in Singapore – in the spring of 2022 to better understand how guest expectations have changed and how hotels are adapting. Consumers and executives were surveyed in the Singapore, the United States, United Kingdom, Germany, France, Australia, Japan, Brazil, and Mexico. Check-out the report at: https://bit.ly/3MPgGXa.
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